Month: March 2016

Instead of our regular blog post, this week, we want to call your attention to a couple of opportunities:

You are invited to attend the second annual ROC Teen Summit!

The purpose of this event is to feature the perspectives of young adults through 10-15 minute “TED Talk” style presentations that showcase “ideas worth spreading” as it pertains to social justice issues that impact our community. Each talk will be focused on social constructs that adolescents face (racism, segregation, misogyny, adultism, etc.) as well as thoughts on how we might come together to deconstruct and resolve these issues and make our community a better place.

Last year, this event outgrew the venue in Nazareth College’s forum, so there is a new location to match the magnitude of the event! This year’s young people will give their “TED Talk” style presentations at the Lyric Theatre, 440 East Avenue in downtown Rochester on Saturday April 23, between 10:00 am and 2:00 pm!

Registration prior to the event is required but admission is free of charge. Please share widely with your networks. For more details and to register online, click here.

Share your stories as part of a GS4A social media campaign

This spring, Great Schools plans to launch a series of videos on our website, on Facebook and perhaps on other forms of social media. these videos will be personal stories that can help put a human face to our message—that would underscore the chronic problems in high poverty schools, and/or highlight the benefits, for both poor and middle class of students, of truly socioeconomically and racially diverse schools.

We are looking for parents, teachers, students and others with stories to share. These videos will be short—typically just two to three minutes—and tightly focused. If you think you have a story that would help us better tell our story, please contact Mark Hare at mhare@rochester.rr.com.

Send a brief biography and a short summary the story you’d like to share.

Recently, The Atlantic, published an article titled, “Eleven Signs a City Will Succeed” by James Fallows. He and his wife flew in a small plane all across the country for three years, visiting lots of cities. This is the list of signs he compiled on his journey:

Divisive national politics seem a distant concern.

You can pick out the local patriots

“Public-private partnerships” are real

People know the civic story.

They have a downtown

They are near a research university.

They have, and care about, a community college

They have unusual schools

They make themselves open

They have big plans

They have craft breweries

Ahlia Kitwana is a member of the GS4A steering committee

Of course item No. 8 grabbed my attention. The article said that these schools seemed to be anything from “ ‘normal’ public schools to statewide public boarding schools. The common theme was intensity of experimentation.”

Evan Dawson, host of WXXI’s Connections did a show on the 11 Signs in February. Although a pretty good discussion ensued, very little had to do with education or any distinct schools in the Rochester area, I was admittedly a little disappointed. However, somewhere in the conversation one of the panel guests mentioned making Rochester a city that people want to move to.

Since my husband and I have had kids we’ve lived in four different American cities, including Rochester. Each time we’ve moved we have thoroughly examined the quality of education in that city or area available to our children. We’ve looked at test scores, demographics, etc., in some cases taking a couple of days off from work to visit several schools prior to moving.

In Rochester, I imagine there are many young families who are moving here from out of town who go through similar vetting processes prior to their move. Families are moving here for medical school, residencies, post-doctoral research at the U of R, RIT and other places of higher learning.

Families are moving here for professional and business opportunities. These families could be a linchpin in further developing the city of Rochester and our community, repopulating city neighborhoods and easing the concentration of poverty in the city. However, when these families start the process of looking for excellent schools for their children, where are they going to find those excellent schools?

In order to entice families new to Rochester to live in the city we must offer excellent “distinct” schools, the kinds of schools GS4A is promoting. Otherwise, these families will look to other options—likely outside the city. And these excellent distinct schools are important, too, for the young adults already living here, who will, as soon as their kids start school, look for place in the suburbs.

If Rochester is to once again, in Fallows’ words, “succeed,” we have to realize that excellent schools (which we cannot achieve until we address the concentration of poverty in city schools) are essential to revitalization. Without them, we cannot bring middle class families to our city.